Rebellion at Attica 
http://socialistworker.org/2011/09/09/rebellion-at-attica 

Lee Wengraf 


September 9, 2011 





September 9 marks the 40th anniversary of the most important prison uprising in 
U.S. history, the rebellion at the Attica prison in upstate New York. On 
September 9, 1971, more than 1,000 prisoners took over the prison yard, issuing 
demands for far-reaching changes. But four days later, state authorities 
defeated the uprising in a deadly show of force that an investigatory 
commission later called the "bloodiest encounter between Americans since the 
Civil War." 

The legacy of Attica is certainly the repression meted out during the retaking 
of the prison and the aftermath--a clear message that prison authorities would 
meet resistance with brutal force. At the same time, Attica stands as an 
immense example of the courage of those behind bars to resist, to organize 
themselves, to build unity across racial lines, and to inspire those outside 
the walls. Lee Wengraf tells the story of the Attica rebellion. 

THE REBELLION at Attica broke out in an era of mass struggles for Black 
liberation and racial justice, an era of revolutionary and radical struggle 
that shook the U.S. government and global ruling classes to the core. Around 
the world, from Vietnam to Africa, anti-colonial movements were overthrowing an 
old order. In the U.S., the antiwar, civil rights and Black Power movements 
drew millions into struggle. 

That militancy and political consciousness didn't stop at the prison gates, but 
gave rise to a national prisoner rights movement. 

The most prominent leader of this movement was California prisoner George 
Jackson, sentenced as a teenager to one year to life for petty theft. Jackson 
became a Black Panther behind bars and went on to write two books, Soledad 
Brother and Blood in My Eye , which brought the conditions faced by prisoners 
into public consciousness and gave voice to the urgent need for resistance. 

As Jackson wrote: 



I'm of the opinion that, right along with the student movement, right along 
with the old familiar workers' movement, the prison movement is central to the 
process of revolution as a whole...We've got to organize our resistance once 
we're inside...turn the prison into just another front of the struggle, tear it 
down from the inside. 

Beginning in the late 1960s, prisoners began to organize systematic truces 
between prisoners across racial lines. Two successful "unity" strikes at 
California's massive San Quentin prison were organized in 1968, and in 1970, 
several multiracial strikes took place in New York City jails, and at Soledad, 
Folsom and San Luis Obispo prisons in California. A work stoppage in November 
at Folsom lasted 19 days, the longest prison strike in U.S. history. 




On August 21, 1971, George Jackson was murdered at San Quentin, shot in the 
back by prison guards who claimed he was trying to escape. Outrage swept 
through prisons and beyond, with writer James Baldwin declaring, "No Black 
person will ever believe that George Jackson died the way they tell us he did." 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 

AT THE Attica prison outside Buffalo in upstate New York, hundreds of prisoners 
organized a protest for Jackson, wearing black armbands and maintaining silence 
throughout the day. 

The prisoners at Attica had already begun to organize against the terrible 
conditions they faced. Chief among their grievances were poor medical 
treatment, lack of educational programs and the racism of prison guards. 

In July, the Attica Liberation Faction submitted a petition to prison 
officials--on September 2, a prisoner representative managed to win an 
in-person meeting with the state Department of Corrections Commissioner Russell 
Oswald. But Oswald left the facility having made no concessions, infuriating 
prisoners when he delivered only a pre-recorded message that he would look into 
the situation. 

On the morning of September 9, prisoners manage to free a prisoner who had been 
ordered to his cell by guards. When guards tried to get control of the protest, 
protesters broke down gates and flooded into the main yard. 

Close to 1,300 prisoners took over the yard, moving quickly to issue demands, 
and organize security, food distribution and the running of D-yard. The 
prisoners took 40 hostages, most of them guards--they remained under guard, but 
protected by the prisoners throughout the uprising. That afternoon, the demands 
of the Attica prisoners were read out by L.D. Barkley, a 21-year-old prisoner, 
who prefaced the demands with this statement: 



The rebellion of inmates at Attica is part of the long struggle of people 
demanding that their basic needs be met...[Gov. Nelson] Rockefeller's response 
to their demands has shown his willingness to commit genocide and kill his own 
people in order to save the system that keeps him rich... 

We are men! We are not beasts and do not intend to be beaten or driven as such. 
The entire prison populace has set forth to change forever the ruthless 
brutalization and disregard for the lives of the prisoners here and throughout 
the United States. What has happened here is but the sound before the fury of 
those who are oppressed... 

We call upon all the conscientious citizens of America to assist us in putting 
an end to this situation that threatens not only our lives, but each and every 
citizen as well. 

The demands included complete amnesty, transportation to a "non-imperialistic 
country," and a team of negotiators to include radical lawyer William Kunstler, 
New York Times reporter Tom Wicker, and representatives of the Black Panther 
Party, Young Lords and the Urban League, among others. The demands were 
followed by "practical proposals" that included freedom of religion, political 
expression, an end to segregation and the state minimum wage law for prisoners. 

The leaders of the uprising--even as they were being branded as "criminals" 
undeserving of fundamental rights--proceeded to set up a democratically elected 
council to negotiate with authorities and to organize themselves in the yard. 
As one rebellion leader, Frank "Big Black" Smith, the head of security during 
the uprising, described it: 



Those with organizing and leadership qualities began organizing things--setting 
up command posts, getting everybody together, taking over the workshops, 
letting out inmates who had been in segregation...We took hostages and put them 
in cells, with security around them. We set up a place for food. People brought 
their extra stuff to one area, and it became a sort of commissary. Everybody 
had a task. 

Arthur Eve, an African American state senator on the observation team, recalled 
the scene: 



They had set up a somewhat elaborate communication system. They had certain 
people who were in charge of security. They had people who were in charge of 
dealing with human waste and garbage, and some who were involved with food and 
other kinds of things. And any of the inmates who were ill or sick, how to deal 
with them... 

It was almost a community within a community. And it was very, very impressive 
that they had said, "This is our home, and we're now going to make it as 
livable as possible." There was a tremendous amount of discipline there within 
the yard. 

Attica also reflected a broader political vision of social change, a 
recognition that the prisoners' demands needed to go beyond reforms and 
improved conditions, important as those were. One of the rebellion leaders, 
Herb Blyden, declared: 



Brothers! The world is hearing us! The world is seeing our struggle! Look at 
these men [the team of observers] from all over this country, coming here at 
our call, brothers--coming here to witness firsthand the struggle against 
racist oppression and brutalization. We got to show them so they can tell the 
world what goes on behind these walls! We are standing here for all the 
oppressed people of the world, and we are not going to give up or knuckle 
under--we are going to show the way! For we have the way! 

The Attica prisoners issued statements of solidarity with those struggling 
against imperialism around the world, especially in Vietnam. Sixty of the 
Attica brothers sent a statement of revolutionary solidarity to Native 
Americans at Wounded Knee that ended with the words, "Even though the Yankee 
imperialists are preparing a bloodbath for America, they will not succeed in 
drowning the people's struggles. All they will evoke is universal hatred 
against themselves.' 

The uprising at Attica transformed the prisoner rights movement into a struggle 
championed by millions around the world. As negotiating team member Tom Wicker 
described: 



They had never had a chance to rise in a racist and oppressive America, and 
when they had refused to yield to slavery and brutality, or had reached out for 
what they rightfully considered their share, society had locked them up, the 
prison being no more than the actual representation of the life they were 
forced to lead even on the outside. 

But all over the world...the downtrodden and the oppressed were listening to 
the words of Attica, taking heart from them, beginning to cast off their 
chains, lift up their heads. 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 

YET DESPITE the worldwide attention on their uprising, the prisoners and their 
supporters made little headway in their discussions with prison authorities. 
While promising to look into their demands down the road, Oswald refused to 
consider the chief demand for amnesty. 

With national media attention glued to the prison, authorities began to mass 
firepower outside the gates. When Rockefeller rejected several requests to meet 
with the prisoners at Attica, Oswald gave the green light to re-take the 
facility. 

On the morning of September 13, the uprising came to an end in a hail of 
gunfire and billowing clouds of tear gas dropped from helicopters. Surrendering 
prisoners were beaten and tortured by police and prison guards wielding clubs, 
chains, screwdrivers and other weapons. 

Kenneth Malloy, a wounded prisoner, died when a trooper fired five rounds from 
his revolver into his eyes from a distance of one foot. James Robinson lay 
dying from a bullet in his chest when a guard fired into his neck from a few 
feet away. Witnesses later described several men bleeding to death because 
prison officials kept them away from medical personnel. 

Frank "Big Black" Smith was beaten severely and made to lie naked on a table in 
the Attica yard all afternoon with a football balanced on his chest--he was 
told he would be castrated if the ball fell. As he later described in a lawsuit 
against the state: 



They ran me through a gauntlet. Everybody had to go through that, with glass 
broken on the floor. Five officers beat me and broke my wrist and opened my 
head up and knocked me just about out. They took me to a room next to the 
hospital, laid me on the floor, spread-eagled me, and played shotgun roulette 
with me. Then they took me and dumped me on the floor in the [prison] hospital. 

All told, the attack by state police left 29 prisoners and 10 hostages dead, 
and 89 wounded. In the aftermath of the prison re-taking, hysterical newspaper 
headlines declared that the hostages' throats had been slit--but medical 
examiners later said that no hostages died at the prisoners' hands. 

The savagery of the repression reflected the extent to which authorities were 
driven by fear of the revolt spreading. As Oswald put it later, "We were 
dealing with a very sophisticated and determined coalition of revolutionaries 
who were trying to exploit public sympathy to achieve their political 
objectives, to trigger a chain reaction undermining authority everywhere." 

For Rockefeller's part, his attempt to win the Republican presidential 
nomination away from Richard Nixon--and therefore his need to counter his 
reputation as a party liberal--helped form his decision to unleash a massacre 
at Attica. When it was all over, Rockefeller publicly commended state police 
for having done a "superb job." Building on his "success" at Attica, 
Rockefeller went on to enact the nation's most repressive drug laws just a few 
years later. 

Many prisoners were charged in connection with the uprising, and two were 
convicted in the death of a guard. But in 1976, Gov. Hugh Carey pardoned 
prisoners who had pled guilty. Not a single trooper or correction officer was 
ever tried for wrongful death or torture at Attica. In 1974, a class action 
civil rights lawsuit was filed on behalf of the 1,281 prisoners who were in 
D-yard the morning of the retaking. Finally, in 2000, New York state awarded $8 
million to the prisoners and their families. 

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 

THE REPRESSION meted out at Attica was not merely directed at the prisoners in 
D-yard, but at the Black Power revolt and the wider social upheaval in the U.S. 
as a whole. Although the following year saw a record number of riots in U.S. 
prisons, the prisoner rights and Black liberation movements began to decline in 
the face of state violence and repression. 

Nevertheless, prisoner resistance won reforms. Some improvements in basic 
conditions were achieved, and prison educational programs expanded. Before 
1965, only a handful of these programs existed in prisons, and none granted 
degrees. By 1982, college prison educational programs were created in 350 
prisons across the country. 

But even those modest changes have been taken back over the ensuing decades. 
Thanks to the law-and-order agenda pursued by Republican and Democratic 
politicians alike--with the racist "war on drugs" as its cutting edge--the U.S. 
prison population grew and grew. In 1980, there were 500,000 people behind bars 
in the U.S.--today that number is 2.4 million, far larger than any other 
country in the world. 

The presence of the grievances that gave rise to Attica was highlighted in 
December 2010 when prisoners at seven facilities in Georgia went on strike in 
the largest prison labor action in U.S. history--the inmates' demand that has 
echoes back to Attica: "No more slavery. Injustice in one place is injustice to 
all. Lock down for liberty!" 

And in July of this year, prisoners in solitary confinement at the brutal 
Pelican Bay prison in California began a hunger strike that eventually spread 
to a third of the state's facilities, involving up to 6,600 prisoners. 

The potential for a renewed prisoner justice movement is greater than it has 
been in decades, and Attica has much to teach us about how to go 
forward--including a recognition that the struggle for reforms must embrace a 
challenge to mass incarceration as a whole. As one of the Attica prisoners put 
it: 



After the rebellion, a lot of us died, a lot of us were wounded. But none of us 
had any regrets because of what we did. As a matter of fact, if we had had 
another opportunity, we would have done it again and again. Because it was 
better than being treated like animals. 

The courage and vision of the rebellion at Attica are crucial to the struggle 
today against a vicious prison system--and to winning racial and social 
justice. 




. 





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